Silver Lake Park |
I have bicycled to this park in the past, but this time I was on my 28 pound hybrid bike, carrying 25 pounds of luggage, including tent, sleeping bag and pad, rain gear and some snacks and water. It's about seventeen mostly flat miles from my place in Ferndale to Everson, where I stopped for coffee and pastry, and bought a SubWay sandwich for dinner. I had remembered it being about eight miles from there to the county park, but it's actually more like eighteen. Everson's Main Street becomes South Pass Road at city limits, then about a half-mile past Oat Coles Road, South Pass Road curves to the left and starts climbing for a mile or so. I hadn't ridden my bike at all for several days before leaving that morning, and my legs weren't ready for hill-climbing with a loaded bike. I had to push the bike up the last bit of that hill, and also a couple of short-but-steep bits farther on. The weather was overcast and muggy, and I arrived at the park tired and sweaty after riding 37 miles in about 3.5 hours.
Base camp |
The camping area is shaded by Douglas firs, maple and cedar trees, with a pretty understory of fern, bracken, salal, huckleberry bushes and all the usual native plants. There are gravelled foot paths, and some bare dirt paths where little kids were riding junior mountain bikes. I locked my bike up to a tree and put up my tent right away, because I'd felt a few sprinkles of rain. I had set up the tent in my living room before, but this was the first time I'd used it outdoors, and actually staked it into the ground. It went up quickly, easily and stood firm all night, though I did have a lot of leftover stakes and tie-downs. Luckily there was no wind that night, or rain either.
Logging equipment at Gerdrum House |
Across the road from the park is the historic Gerdrum Family farmhouse, where I walked around and peeked in the windows, and an exhibit of old logging and lumber milling equipment, now overgrown with saplings and bushes.
Back at my campsite I decided to start a fire. A previous camper had left some half-burned logs, and I'd brought a half-dozen old charcoal briquettes, a utility candle and a book of matches. With these and some sticks and twigs I was able to get a little fire going, to create a cozy atmosphere while I ate my SubWay sandwich. But I turned my back on the fire too long, until it began to produce a lot of atmosphere, in the form of smoke, and nearby campers started coughing theatrically. I tried to build the fire back up, which mostly produced more smoke, so finally I broke the coals up and went to bed around 9pm. The campground was very quiet, with no eerie noises in the night, except for someone who unloaded two or three cases of empty beer bottles in the recycling bins sometime after 10pm. I am comfortable sleeping on hard, flat surfaces, but I had some kinks in my back, and my left leg had some sore, out-of-joint spots in the hip, knee and ankle, and after a while my legs began to feel hot. I unzipped my sleeping bag to cool down, and finally fell peacefully asleep, with no nightmares or anxiety attacks.
Morning dew on the grass |
South Pass Road curves northward from Everson, running almost within sight of the Canadian border at one point. I never can spot the place where it comes closest to Canada, which is shortly before the road turns southward toward Silver Lake Park. Leaving the park that morning I looked to my left, and saw a tempting downhill stretch heading south. I had never ridden that section of the road before, but according to my map, South Pass Road loops around to intersect with Mount Baker Highway (Hwy. 542), where I could turn right to get to a section of the in-progress Bay-to-Baker bike route that would put me back on South Pass Road, heading in to Everson, by-passing some of the rolling hills I'd ridden the day before.
Mount Baker from South Pass Road |
The ride home was 38 miles in three hours, for a 75 mile round-trip. The whole over-night trip was probably more than 24 hours, but that would be because I took a long lunch-hour in Everson, and took my time in the morning, listening to birds and dawdling with packing up my camp.
Mount Baker (zoomed in) |
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